Literature DB >> 19346422

Pedestrian injuries in school-attending children: a comparison of injury data sources in a low-income setting.

P P S Lee1, A Mihailovic, L Rothman, M Mutto, M Nakitto, A W Howard.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To estimate and compare the rate of pedestrian injuries in primary school-attending children of urban Uganda using different data sources.
DESIGN: Data collection from a hospital-based trauma registry, police data, teacher reports, and a cross-sectional community-based survey.
SETTING: Kawempe, the largest urban district in the capital Kampala, Uganda. Patients or
SUBJECTS: Primary school-attending children aged 4-12 from 39 randomly selected schools were included in the trauma registry, police data, and teacher reports. 1828 households randomly selected from the 39 schools were interviewed for the community survey. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: A pedestrian injury. For the trauma registry-defined as a pedestrian injury resulting in a visit to the hospital. For the police data-defined as a pedestrian injury reported to the police. For the teacher reports and survey-defined as a pedestrian injury resulting in at least a day off school.
RESULTS: The estimated pedestrian injury rates per 100 000 person-years were 54.0 (95% CI 25.3 to 117.4), <53.97 (95% CI 23.8 to 125.9), 1878.8 (95% CI 1513.1 to 2322.4), and 764.0 (95% CI 523.3 to 1117.2) from the trauma registry, police data, teacher reports, and community survey, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS: Pedestrian injury rates differed significantly between different data sources. Users must be aware of the different target populations, definitions, and limitations of the data sources before direct comparisons are made. Injury reports by volunteer teachers may be a feasible source of injury data in other low/middle-income countries.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19346422     DOI: 10.1136/ip.2008.018689

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Inj Prev        ISSN: 1353-8047            Impact factor:   2.399


  1 in total

1.  State of pedestrian road safety in Uganda: a qualitative study of existing interventions.

Authors:  Jimmy Osuret; Stellah Namatovu; Claire Biribawa; Bonny Enock Balugaba; Esther Bayiga Zziwa; Kennedy Muni; Albert Ningwa; Frederick Oporia; Milton Mutto; Patrick Kyamanywa; David Guwatudde; Olive Kobusingye
Journal:  Afr Health Sci       Date:  2021-09       Impact factor: 0.927

  1 in total

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